Santa Fe New Mexican

Scholars hope police reform book will help activists

- By Russell Contreras

ALBUQUERQU­E — Two scholars, including one who protested against Albuquerqu­e police, have written a guide for activists pushing for police reforms.

David Correia and Tyler Wall said their book, The Police: A

Field Guide, released this month, is intended to provide activists in places like Ferguson, Mo., and Sacramento, Calif., ways to identify attempts by those seeking to thwart prevention of future police shootings.

That includes pinpointin­g language that takes the focus away from structural changes needed at police department­s to reduce police brutality, said Correia, an American Studies professor at The University of New Mexico.

He led a sit-in at the Albuquerqu­e mayor’s office in 2014 over the fatal police shooting of a homeless man.

“We’re trying to call into question ‘copspeak’ and the language of police violence,” said Wall, a social justice professor for the Eastern Kentucky University.

He contended terms like “officer-involved shooting” or “stop-and-frisk” divert attention from systemic problems in police department­s. Language like that legitimati­zes police violence, Wall said.

Bob Martinez, the president of Albuquerqu­e Lodge No. 1 of the Fraternal Order of Police of New Mexico, said officers do embrace reforms and are willing to listen to community residents. He said that language used by officers does not interfere with trying to bridge communicat­ion.

“The real problem is that people have lost respect for authority,” Martinez said. “That is what’s preventing a lot of good people from becoming officers. This is a societal problem.”

The book comes as protests continue in Sacramento over the fatal shooting Sunday by two officers of an unarmed 22-yearold black man. The department released video footage on Wednesday showing the officers yelling that Clark had a gun before firing. He was holding a cellphone, and not a gun.

The city of Albuquerqu­e is completing federal court-ordered reforms following a string of police shootings involving suspects suffering from mental illness.

Martinez said Albuquerqu­e police are cooperatin­g and want the reforms to work.

In addition, the authors said many police department­s mainly protect the wealthy against the poor. That often dictates policies about policing poor neighbors, they said.

“Policing is about keeping people in their places and protecting private property,” Correia said. “We have to have a conversati­on about how capitalism affects the policing of poor neighborho­ods.”

Luis Robles, an Albuquerqu­e attorney who has defended police officers involved in shootings, says he finds it “interestin­g” the book sees officers as the face of capitalism.

“Many officers are union members who make less than $60,000 a year,” Robles said.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters march past Sacramento City Hall on Thursday in a demonstrat­ion over the shooting death Sunday of Stephon Alonzo Clark by Sacramento police.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters march past Sacramento City Hall on Thursday in a demonstrat­ion over the shooting death Sunday of Stephon Alonzo Clark by Sacramento police.

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